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                <text>The Gagauz people are an Orthodox Turkic people mostly living in Moldova. Originally living in Bulgaria, they were given incentives to re-settle to Moldova by the Russians following the Russo-Turkish wars in order to settle an under-cultivated region. </text>
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                <text>Menz, Astrid. "The Gagauz." Çagatay &amp; Kuban (2006): 370-383.&#13;
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                <text>This is a table equating groups of roman characters and cyrillic characters. In the 1920's, the Soviet Union attempted to unify Bessarabia (a region of Romania that used to be a part of the kingdom of Moldavia before the Ottoman Empire) and the Moldovan Soviet Socialist Republic (a region of the Soviet Empire). As a part of their attempt to create a new region, they applied the cyrillic alphabet to the language spoken by those of Moldovan descent. This language is virtually the same as Romanian and prior to the 1920's, was written in roman characters. In 1989, when the Moldova declared independence, the official language was changed back to being written in roman characters, except for in the region of Transnisteria, where the Cyrillic characters are still used to this day.</text>
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                  <text>Here are the object biographies generated for the SW52 Unit 4 Assignment.</text>
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                <text>"Финский военный музей Sotamuseo." Финский военный музей Sotamuseo. N.p., n.d. Web. 31 Mar. 2014. &lt;http://miniaviamodel.ru/museum/sotamuseo.php&gt;&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
"The Molotov Cocktail." The Molotov Cocktail. Freedom Manual, 28 Dec. 2009. Web. 30 Mar. 2014. &lt;http://freedommanual.blogspot.com/2009/12/molotov-coctail.html&gt;.</text>
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                <text> 1936-09-01</text>
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                <text>© 2003–2009 PunBB. &#13;
&#13;
© 2014 YouTube, LLC.&#13;
&#13;
The following terms and conditions govern all use of the WordPress.com website and all content, services and products available at or through the website, including, but not limited to, Jetpack by WordPress.com (“Jetpack”) and the WordPress.com VIP hosting service (“VIP Service”), (taken together, the Website). The Website is owned and operated by Automattic, Inc. (“Automattic”). The Website is offered subject to your acceptance without modification of all of the terms and conditions contained herein and all other operating rules, policies (including, without limitation, Automattic’s Privacy Policy) and procedures that may be published from time to time on this Site by Automattic (collectively, the “Agreement”).&#13;
&#13;
Copyright © 1999 – 2014. &#13;
&#13;
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                <text>Existing first as a makeshift, anti-Soviet bomb, the Molotov cocktail has taken on meaning as not only a material weapon of guerilla warfare, but also an international symbol of resistance. As an explosive device, the Molotov cocktail has a long history of deployment by revolutionary, ironically anti-soviet, forces. This tradition carries over into the 1956 Hungarian Revolution and contemporary crisis in the Ukraine. Beyond that, the Molotov cocktail also holds meaning as a cultural object of resistance, seen in its idiomatic appropriation by agents of the American media and entertainment culture.</text>
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&#13;
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                <text>Bild, Pressens.  “Press Photo of Rudolf Nurejev [sic] at His Defection from the Soviet Union 1961.”  Photograph.  Wikipedia.  Wikipedia Foundation Inc., 28 Mar. 2014.  Web.  22 Apr. 2014.  &#13;
&#13;
“Rudolf Nureyev—‘Aureole.’”  Front Row Photos.  N.p., n.d.  Web.  22 Apr. 2014.  &#13;
&#13;
Smith, Dinita.  “New Light on Nureyev’s Grand Leap to the West.”  The New York Times.  The New York Times Company, 6 Oct. 1998.  Web.  21 Apr. 2014.  &#13;
&#13;
“1961—Nureyev Defects to the West.”  Rudolf Nureyev Foundation.  Rudolf Nureyev&#13;
Foundation, 2012.  Web.  21 Apr. 2014.   &#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Word  Count: 265&#13;
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